I hope you had so much fun getting to know the Lama models, and I hope you are excited to try to use Lama model in your day-to-day life and work. You wrote a birthday card for a friend while formatting your prompts in the recommended way with instruction and start tags. You asked the model for advice on fun things to do and used prompting methods for multi-tone chats to enable you to ask follow-up questions. You classified the sentiment of text messages and summarized an email while applying prompt engineering best practices. Some of these include giving examples of how you want the model to respond, called in-context learning. You also applied and refined chain of thought reasoning by asking the model to think step by step. Next, you compared the small 7B, medium 13B, and the large 70B LAMA models on the same task, All of the Lama models are available for free use with an open commercial license. That means you can use any Llama model in your applications without licensing restrictions. You have the flexibility to fine tune the model, host it in your infrastructure, and resell the fine tune model. Finally, my colleagues at Meta and I would love to hear your feedback about Llama and your experiences using it in your work. The Lama models are made for the AI community, so your feedback and contributions will help all your other fellow developers who use these models. For more ideas of fun things to do with these models, please check out our Lama Recipes GitHub repo. Thanks again for joining me. I really hope that you'll use what you have learned in this course and build some great applications. Oh, hi, Amit. Hi, Shayan. I was wondering where